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blustery. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Etymology
From bluster + -y.
Adjective
blustery (comparative more blustery, superlative most blustery)
- Blowing in loud and abrupt bursts.
- Synonyms: blusterous, gusty
Currently, there are blustery winds blowing in Patagonia.
1920, Clara Ingram Judson, “Lost—One Doll Cart”, in Mary Jane’s City Home, New York: Barse & Hopkins, page 117:Fortunately, that May morning was bright and sunny; the breeze blew warm from the southland instead of cold and blustery from the lake, and it was the very best kind of a morning possible for being out of doors.
1957, Bernard Malamud, chapter 1, in The Assistant, New York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy, page 8:He wished fleetingly that he could once more be out in the open, as when he was a boy—never in the house, but the sound of the blustery wind frightened him.
- Accompanied by strong wind.
- Synonyms: blowy, blusterous, breezy, squally, stormy, tempestuous, windy
Today is such a cold blustery day!
1918, Willa Cather, My Ántonia, Introduction:[…] blustery winters with little snow, when the whole country is stripped bare and gray as sheet-iron.
1986, John le Carré, A Perfect Spy:In the small hours of a blustery October morning in a south Devon coastal town that seemed to have been deserted by its inhabitants, Magnus Pym got out of his elderly country taxicab and, having paid the driver and waited till he had left, struck out across the church square.
- (of a person) Pompous or arrogant, especially in one's speech; given to outbursts.
- Synonyms: blustering, blusterous, swaggering
1937, Lloyd C. Douglas, chapter 16, in Forgive Us Our Trespasses, London: Peter Davies, page 290:Uncle Miles wished only to dodge the issue that had hurled them apart, offering an effusive and blustery hospitality as an alternative to the air-clearing discussion which the situation so urgently called for.
Derived terms
Translations
blowing in loud and abrupt bursts
accompanied by strong wind